It would have made more sense to eat them, although I myself would be quite 
unable to eat my horse. Not all at once anyway ;)

Michel

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Nick Palmer 
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com 
Sent: Saturday, May 03, 2008 1:35 PM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Re: Eye of the Gyre



>From infoplease.com

horse latitudes, two belts of latitude where winds are light and the weather 
is hot and dry. They are located mostly over the oceans, at about 30° lat. 
in each hemisphere, and have a north-south range of about 5° as they follow 
the seasonal migration of the sun. The horse latitudes are associated with 
the subtropical anticyclone and the large-scale descent of air from 
high-altitude currents moving toward the poles. After reaching the earth's 
surface, this air spreads toward the equator as part of the prevailing trade 
winds or toward the poles as part of the westerlies. The belt in the 
Northern Hemisphere is sometimes called the "calms of Cancer" and that in 
the Southern Hemisphere the "calms of Capricorn." The term horse latitudes 
supposedly originates from the days when Spanish sailing vessels transported 
horses to the West Indies. Ships would often become becalmed in mid-ocean in 
this latitude, thus severely prolonging the voyage; the resulting water 
shortages would make it necessary for crews to throw their horses overboard.

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